Goosemaster
Well-known member
Geese are easy, if you can get up very early.For early goose season?
Geese are easy, if you can get up very early.For early goose season?
I will say that the etiquette, or lack of it, is different in SD. I've had more issues like this in 3 yrs of hunting there than I have had in 30ish years in Kansas. Even in the heydays when Kansas was packed.Went out and was at a spot at 930. Just about to head in and 2 vehicles rolled in at 1002 and 5 guys got out to hunt where we were walking in. Ya, it’s all public, but if anyone on here was one of them and reads this, F off. Learn some etiquette. Same truck paced the parking lot 4 times. I have a feeling these kind of guys arent on a bird hunting website. If so, I repeat my previous.
The pup got on some scent, but everything we hunted was surrounded by corn. But i got to see the drive in this dog-gonna be a good time.
Ive seen this several times first weekend or two of season and know its part of the game with limited space, I usually try to make contact and workout a acceptable plan but otherwise let them get in front and hunt all the birds they race past.Went out and was at a spot at 930. Just about to head in and 2 vehicles rolled in at 1002 and 5 guys got out to hunt where we were walking in. Ya, it’s all public, but if anyone on here was one of them and reads this, F off. Learn some etiquette. Same truck paced the parking lot 4 times. I have a feeling these kind of guys arent on a bird hunting website. If so, I repeat my previous.
The pup got on some scent, but everything we hunted was surrounded by corn. But i got to see the drive in this dog-gonna be a good time.
That's unfortunate. Its probably gonna get worse next weekend too.Went out and was at a spot at 930. Just about to head in and 2 vehicles rolled in at 1002 and 5 guys got out to hunt where we were walking in. Ya, it’s all public, but if anyone on here was one of them and reads this, F off. Learn some etiquette. Same truck paced the parking lot 4 times. I have a feeling these kind of guys arent on a bird hunting website. If so, I repeat my previous.
This isn't from me, but I'm going to speak for someone else here. That young bird on the far right, Goosemaster wouldn't have shot him. He doesn't like to shoot birds that aren't in full color.This might surprise some of you, but Ace & I decided to hunt this weekend. Both days. Each day we started at about 3:30. Saturday, found a spot near picked beans & were done in about 1.5 hrs. Saw about 30 pheasants, including many young ones. This was an area that got pounded even harder than most last winter. Sunday, hunted an area surrounded on all sides by standing corn & were done in about 2 hrs. Saw about a dozen birds. Left home at 2:30 each day & saw only a few obvious hunters in the road. Saw a total of 1 other person hunting the entire weekend, although I didn't do much driving around. I've talked to others, who did real well & haven't seen so many birds on public land this early in a long time. And that's not because corn has been harvested, because most of it has not been. Maybe 10-30% harvested in the places I've been. I think in most parts of the state, the doubting Thomases, who thought it'd take years for pheasants to recover from winter's decimation, were wrong. They just weren't seeing them in the usual places, because they were forced elsewhere to survive in an uncommon fashion. Somehow or another, many of them made it. I'm pretty optimistic that it's going to be another really good season.
View attachment 6254
Went out and was at a spot at 930. Just about to head in and 2 vehicles rolled in at 1002 and 5 guys got out to hunt where we were walking in. Ya, it’s all public, but if anyone on here was one of them and reads this, F off. Learn some etiquette. Same truck paced the parking lot 4 times. I have a feeling these kind of guys arent on a bird hunting website. If so, I repeat my previous.
The pup got on some scent, but everything we hunted was surrounded by corn. But i got to see the drive in this dog-gonna be a good time.
Ace looks like he earned his dinner. Way out NW in Harding County, birds were very scarce. Blizzards last winter completely buried most cover, saw shelterbelts half a dozen rows wide filled in with 10 ft. high drifts alongside fields scoured clear of snow by brutal winds. In late January I saw dozens of dead birds along a short stretch of roadside where melting had exposed them.This might surprise some of you, but Ace & I decided to hunt this weekend. Both days. Each day we started at about 3:30. Saturday, found a spot near picked beans & were done in about 1.5 hrs. Saw about 30 pheasants, including many young ones. This was an area that got pounded even harder than most last winter. Sunday, hunted an area surrounded on all sides by standing corn & were done in about 2 hrs. Saw about a dozen birds. Left home at 2:30 each day & saw only a few obvious hunters in the road. Saw a total of 1 other person hunting the entire weekend, although I didn't do much driving around. I've talked to others, who did real well & haven't seen so many birds on public land this early in a long time. And that's not because corn has been harvested, because most of it has not been. Maybe 10-30% harvested in the places I've been. I think in most parts of the state, the doubting Thomases, who thought it'd take years for pheasants to recover from winter's decimation, were wrong. They just weren't seeing them in the usual places, because they were forced elsewhere to survive in an uncommon fashion. Somehow or another, many of them made it. I'm pretty optimistic that it's going to be another really good season.
View attachment 6254
Nope.I only shoot full color, and try not to shoot young birds.This isn't from me, but I'm going to speak for someone else here. That young bird on the far right, Goosemaster wouldn't have shot him. He doesn't like to shoot birds that aren't in full color.
That's the way parts of montana were in December. I wonder if birds survived that?Ace looks like he earned his dinner. Way out NW in Harding County, birds were very scarce. Blizzards last winter completely buried most cover, saw shelterbelts half a dozen rows wide filled in with 10 ft. high drifts alongside fields scoured clear of snow by brutal winds. In late January I saw dozens of dead birds along a short stretch of roadside where melting had exposed them.
Congrats and glad to hear numbers are up in your opinion. Matches what I am hearing also. If we were hunting together I would have had to ask if the one on the right was still on the teet when you flushed it. . Few years ago had one very similiar and had he not cackled he would have survived as I had no idea it was a rooster until that point.This might surprise some of you, but Ace & I decided to hunt this weekend. Both days. Each day we started at about 3:30. Saturday, found a spot near picked beans & were done in about 1.5 hrs. Saw about 30 pheasants, including many young ones. This was an area that got pounded even harder than most last winter. Sunday, hunted an area surrounded on all sides by standing corn & were done in about 2 hrs. Saw about a dozen birds. Left home at 2:30 each day & saw only a few obvious hunters in the road. Saw a total of 1 other person hunting the entire weekend, although I didn't do much driving around. I've talked to others, who did real well & haven't seen so many birds on public land this early in a long time. And that's not because corn has been harvested, because most of it has not been. Maybe 10-30% harvested in the places I've been. I think in most parts of the state, the doubting Thomases, who thought it'd take years for pheasants to recover from winter's decimation, were wrong. They just weren't seeing them in the usual places, because they were forced elsewhere to survive in an uncommon fashion. Somehow or another, many of them made it. I'm pretty optimistic that it's going to be another really good season.
View attachment 6254
The only time I hunt public where other vehicles are parked, is if it's a huge area, and there is no place else to hunt.Then, I will unless it's packed. Don't expect to see any birds.That's awful. I can forgive the accidental "parked where we couldn't see one another" instances, but that is trash to step in on someone else's spot.
Looking forward to hearing about the pup's progress!
That's not exactly prime pheasant country at any time, but especially during a tough winter. Not NEAR the number of shelterbelts & big sloughs around as further east. Snow completely socked in most of the cover out east too. I think lots of pheasants made it through winter in trees/shelterbelts that surround farm places, which obviously aren't near as prevalent out west river.Ace looks like he earned his dinner. Way out NW in Harding County, birds were very scarce. Blizzards last winter completely buried most cover, saw shelterbelts half a dozen rows wide filled in with 10 ft. high drifts alongside fields scoured clear of snow by brutal winds. In late January I saw dozens of dead birds along a short stretch of roadside where melting had exposed them.
Be careful how you use those dirty words like shelterbelt and slough. Someone with a track hoe is probably listening.That's not exactly prime pheasant country at any time, but especially during a tough winter. Not NEAR the number of shelterbelts & big sloughs around as further east. Snow completely socked in most of the cover out east too. I think lots of pheasants made it through winter in trees/shelterbelts that surround farm places, which obviously aren't near as prevalent out west river.